Max Newton, “Seven Witless Years,” Australian Penthouse, October 1979 (first issue), pp. 43-52. Below is the opening section only, which is a summary of the entire piece.
The middle classes of Australia are at last beginning to realise the gravity of Newton’s first law: never put your faith in politicians.
Politicians cannot solve problems. They are not meant to. They are meant to reconcile differences and reach agreements.
They are by nature cowards. They are by nature liars. They are by nature procrastinators. Politicians react to pressure; they react to fear. And most of all they react to fear of their own jobs.
Malcolm Fraser will start cutting taxes and government spending when the wave of anger from the middle class voters of this country overwhelms the incessant pressure from the other side — the pressure from ambitious ministers and greedy civil servants for a continuance of the fantastic escalation of government spending which has brought this country to its knees in the past seven years.
It began in 1972 when Gough Whitlam told the people “It’s Time.” They did not believe he was telling them it was time for a disaster — and he was going to give it to them.
Today, almost seven disastrous years after that crucial election, our country is crippled and stunned, twisted and horrified, embittered and divided — as a result of the violent social revolution Whitlam tried to bring about.
Whitlam promised a new deal for the middle classes: bright new schools, sewerage, free health care, new roads, new suburbs, homes of their own.
This appeal to greed could not be resisted. The prosperous middle class voters of the metropolitan fringes gave Whitlam his chance, and today the whole nation is still suffering.
A feeble and divided Liberal-Country Party coalition in Canberra is reeling under the weight of the task of restoring peace and prosperity to this increasingly irascible, lawless and disillusioned nation.
Malcolm Fraser is a tough talker. But he has not started to perform. Yet there is a possibility that the rage of middle classes will finally force him to act — and throttle the growth of the flaccid, self-indulgent public service of Australia.
This will happen for one reason — the middle classes are coming to realise that the size of the bill for the Whitlam revolution is too high for them to pay.
They thought someone else would pay for all the lovely things they were promised. They thought the “rich” would pay; the “big companies” would pay; or the “multinational corporations” would pay. They never thought they would be the ones to foot the bill for the revolution. They thought they were going to be the beneficiaries.
In revolutionary terms, the greedy, salaried middle classes have lost.
Whitlam set out to make a revolution. He set out to enrich the salaried urban middle classes at the expense of the self-employed, the farmers and the corporations. The revolution was to be accomplished through a frantic expansion of government spending, notably on health and education. While the Whitlamite rhetoric game some intimations of concern for the so-called underprivileged, the principal thrust of his policies was to benefit the well-off middle classes. There was an appeal to their cupidity, to their resentments and to their credibility.
To date, Malcolm Fraser has only tinkered with these policies. He has made some token moves to restrain the headlong growth of government spending, while no doubt waiting for the build up of fear, disillusionment, rage and frustration to give him more political clout for truly vigorous counter-revolutionary policies.
Meanwhile, every day brings more evidence of the extent of the disaster which has overwhelmed the nation.
The broad consequences of the policies of the past seven years are:
- A stagnation of output.
- A collapse of private investment in buildings, housing and new productive plant and equipment.
- An unprecedented toll of unemployment, particularly among the nation’s young people.
- Inflation unrivalled in the nation’s history — or indeed in the history of most of the advanced, civilised, industrial nations. In the 40 years between Federation and 1941 prices doubled; between 1941 and 1951 they doubled again because of the war; in the 20 years between 1951 and 1971 they doubled again, and in the catastrophic six years between 1971 and 1977 they doubled again.
- A tide of industrial unrest, strikes, bitterness and violence.
- A pitifully small result in terms of educational or health output from the fortune which has been lavished on these areas.
- A bloated public service, virtually immune from any attempt to reduce its size.
- A permanent, built-in level of government spending which dooms the nation’s taxpayers to unprecedented levels of taxation for years to come.
- A lawlessness and cynicism among the rich, the self-employed and the young.
- The certain knowledge that the welfare state is not a healing but a terribly divisive idea. It is an idea which in its expression encourages waste, subsidises sloth, rewards dishonesty, ignores lawlessness and diverts efforts to areas where political pressure provides the guideline.
- Advance Australia fascist: The forces that make Australia a fascist country
- The Economic Guerrillas: A lecture in honour of Maxwell Newton
- Maxwell Newton Audio at Mises.org
- Max Newton on Video at first Mises Institute Conference (1983)
- Max Newton in Penthouse Magazine
- Up the Workers! Bob Howard's 1979 Workers Party Reflection in Playboy
- Max Newton stars in Ron Paul video
- Bunny of the Welfare State
- The Crumbling Oligarchies
- Is Australia So Bad That It Can't Get Worse?
- Max Newton: Cauldron-Journalist
- Max Newton: a muckraker makes good
- An Open Letter to Bob Hawke, B.Litt., Oxon; from Maxwell Newton, BA, Cantab.
- Welfare Creates Poverty
- Welfare State a National Disgrace
- A "spy" replies
- Josh Frydenberg vs Maxwell Newton on Sir Robert Menzies
Luke
January 19, 2011 @ 11:06 pm
"Meanwhile, every day brings more evidence of the extent of the disaster which has overwhelmed the nation."
Some governments are just more competent at their jobs. Malcom Fraser obviously wasn't as competent as Whitlam. We can only pray we have more incompetent governments than competent.
Lets face it we all pay for the government no matter who wins and how "successful" they were.
Present government in point I don't think I have seen a single decision hit the press sheets since Julia Gillard wasn't elected. I can only hope it continues although the floods might rally them into taxing everyone who chooses to live above the flood plains or mine coal so those who live below the flood plain can have free flood insurance. That there is definately an unfairness that the government needs to fix, dem high and mighty dry people got to be bought back to da river.
(BTW is it just me or is an event that happens 3-4 times in 100 years a one in 25 year event and not a 1 in a 100 year event)